nnsyl- > that auto- te an- anted direc- merce duced es un- of the Labor, nding yf the > com- rgan- iced a , pub- of the | 1pany, Choc- . has £ the Con- n of a Jnited The it are lusion lowing retary 5 Sec- Joseph --State anklin 111 the to the for a‘ m is’ ed by 1 bama. tarium ons of erculo- ted as ypoint=- ed. d the ch and st 102. id en- “Long zg live Jombes ending 1trality nd so- rat. ranklin ber of 1ission, .. Mr. ppoint- 1 com- m Re- w York: rolling ly out~- ym tax- law. oa | { that it can be folded up when not in ‘same proportion of land, the poultry ITED Ts ET Seid eS BAN 2B AUP Good Breeds in Swine. Too many farmers work on the plan that a pig is a pig regardless of breed and as a result they continue line breeding until they have little left in the pig except the form. They may be right and doubtless are, but the farmer who raises pigs for what he can get out of them in their gross weight at market prices cares little about the sciedtific breeding. It is admitted that it would be better if he cared more, but if he will take pains to make the necessary changes in lime at frequent intervals he need not worry about the intricacies of cross or line breeding. Yet from his very indifference ‘0 these things may come his, indifference to the more essential points, and mainly the one point of raising the standard of his herd. With high-grade swine properly bred, given food, pasture, sunshine, pure air and water and variety of feed better results are obtained by far than with serub stock. If one has a fair lot of females it would be a good investment to raise the standard of the herd by obtaining the services of a grade boar. Grade up the pigs as you would ®e cows composing the dairy and you'll find it will pay in ibe long run, © & 3 A New Feed Bag For Dobbin. The driver of every team should be supplied with a bag of some kind for holding feed for his horses, as he sel- dom is sure where he will ‘be when feeding time comes.. Some drivers are very careful in this respect, while others make use of anything that is available. Quite a large number of feed bags are in use, the majority being constructed so that they can be attached ‘and suspended to the side of the horse's head. This does not give the horse any freedom to move his head without moving the bag also. A Philadelphia man has patented an exceedingly simple feed bag which overcomes this fault. The bottom and sides are made of canvas or other flex- ible material, while the top consists of a circular frame divided into two sections, which are connected by small hoops. Supporting the bag are two metal rods, one on each side, having A FEED BAG FOR HORSES. hooks at the end, which fit inte the loops in the frame. In the céntre and at the other end of the rods are eircu- lar hoops, which are shiiped to fit over the shaft of the vehicle. It can easily be seen how easily this ~ould be done, the bag always remaining in position where the horse can conveniently reach the feed, at the same time being able to move his head freely. This feed bag has the additional advantage use.—Philadelphia Records Poultry and Eggs Pay. Every year demonstrates that the egg market is never fully supplied. We are compelled to import eggs to keep pace with the demand, and if the. Western farmers are unable to make poultry pay, because of the dis- advantages of location and markets, there is nothing in the way:of the farmer who has markets all around him. Ft is creditable to farmers that they may produce a large proportion of the poultry and eggs that are sold in the large cities, but there is room for more production, The obstacle in the way of success is that the poultry does not receive the care bestowed on larger stock. In all experiments made with cows and poultry, on the, gave the greater profit, and yet the. profits could be made larger, Fifty hens are not too many on one acre of ground, and the average profit should be one dollar per hen a year. This is fifty dollars per acre profit. The cow. will not give guch a large average in’ proportion. A flock of good hens, however, if well managed, should av- erage more than:a dollar each. More eggs should be obtained in winter. If each hen produced only one dozen eggs additional during the whole win- ter, it would make a large difference in the profits The point is io deter- mine to secure this addition, and to do so the farmer should be willing to give: his whole attention to a large flock, if he can do so by aisposing of some stock that'may be unprofitable. It means a different system from giv- ing the poultry over to women to man- age; The way to make poultry: pay is for the farmer to take hold, and when the snow covers the ground, to do for the hens the same as for the animals. ~Farmers’ Home Journal, re — Lambs in the Winter. The plan has been adopted by cer- tain Michigan feeders during recent years of purchasing lambs in the aii- tumn and carrying them through the avinter on rough feed with a moderate allowance of grain and then fattening them and selling: them in the spring after having removed the wool, “The re [Sex] . molds, but they do change with the ‘that lambs thus handled have brought the most money during recent years. With reference to the outcome, how- on the condition of the lambs at the time of purchase, says The Farmer. When they are to be handled thus it is better to purchase lambs some- what young and not carrying too much flesh, especially. if they are bought by the pound. Such lambs will make more pounds of increase than heavy lambs purchased at the same season. They can also be brought into the market in a proper condition of finish at the season named better than larger and more fleshy lambs which would naturally become high conditioned at ‘an earlier seaton. In all the States. of the Northwest lambs could be fed and managed thus, If those sufliciently light could not be obstained for feeding it would be better to take heavier lambs than to take none at all, providing the farmer is prepared to handle lambs thus. on old ewes when they are purchased with due thought and care, Horse, Breeding Abroad. Something: of ‘the, extent of horse- breeding by public ‘authority and un- der public supervision; referred io by a horse-breeding paper, is to the effect that the French authorities own some- thing like three thousand stallions, half Leing of the high-stepping and coaching type, the others being thor- oughbred and draft horses. Farmers ‘breed"to’these stallions about a quar- ter of a million mares at very small fees and receive premiums at local fairs, ete., for showing high-class foals. The French Government annually dis- tributes over three millions of dollars to encourage the breeders, and a farmer has the Government for a regi ular customer for the best of the horses he raises, : When such a happy condition of afi fairs obtains here, if it ever does, horsed breeding in this country will become an exact science and a highly remunera- tive national enterprise. If we have to wait ten years for the United States Government to show results from the effort it is now putting forth, it will take a quarter of a century at least to get the bulk of the breeders in this broad land interested in the plan, and returns from money and time invested will have to be left to posterity, as few now lving and involved deeply in horse breeding will be on top of the earth to reap any benefit. When the good time comes, however, there will be such high-class material pro- duced here, and such unique facilities for its rapid transportation through- out the world, that there will certainly not exist a shadow of discontent on the part of breeder or consumer.—In- diana Farmer. —————— A Practical Farm Bridge. On the majority of farms there is need for one or more bridges. Too often they are poorly constructed and not kept in repair. Resulting front such neglect, a horse, the best one al- ways, goes through and breaks a leg; or a loaded wagon breaks through with much loss and then after the damagg has been done. the farmer attempts to repair the old or build a mew bridge, ‘The ‘general “topography as well ay numerous streams on my farm pea) it necessary to have a number o bridges. After planning all manner of crosscover arrangements. I finally adopted: the one shown dn the illustra- tion and when built of good timber it is a very lasting and serviceable af- fair. It is especially valuable wherd a single log can not be used asa stringer. The stringer pieces (a) should. be of nothing but good timber and of such size as is required to sustain the weight which the bridge will be called upon to bear.—Robert Worden, in The Epitomist. | 3 r? ' Butter Mould Fashicns. “I see,” said the man who goes to market frequently, “that the acorn is in style again as a decoration for but- ter molds: Last spring the field daisy was the flower most frequently printed upon pats-of butter. Before that the chrysanthemum was the favorite. ; I never could understand the necessity for chafiging the fashion in butter seasons almost as'regularly as women's clothes. Even big dairies that mark all rolls of butter swith a special trade. mark, vary the floral trimming of their molds from time to time. Among: thé favorite decorations acorns dnd oak leaves have their inning most frequent: ly. Chrysanthemums rank next in pop- ularity. eh “Some, old-fashioned butter: makers there are, however, who scorn the orna. mental butter molds... The tip of the ladle is tlieir implement of art, and with that they carve figures én a roll oi butter that.make all floral and hort: cultural designs lgok commonplace.”-- New York Press. en Te Big Blueberry Pack: The blueberry canning factory at Island Pond, Vt., has just shit down after canning 300,000 gallons of prod: tet: “Over 1,500,000 pounds of berries have been used; and Seven earloads of lumber were required to box the goods for shipment.—New England Grocer. ever, we think much will depend up-. Good money can sometimes be made: i |: PERFUMES AS MEDICINE Therapeutic Value of Some Plants Re- cently Discovered. Although perfumes have been used by most of fnankind for over 3000 Years, their value as a therapeutic agent has only recently been demon- strated. The perfumes of flowers or thote coming from plants are said to be the most healthful and: soothing to the nervous and those afflicted with diseases of a nervous character. Ac- cording to the doctors the scent of vio- lets is a nr ! sedative, having the power of n~ or tonimg down a nervous sysiem or temperament whose equilibrium is easily disturbed. In the “Materia Medica,” the doctors’ book of drugs and medicaments, there are seventeen items with which the violet essence is incorporated. In cases of cancer violet leaves have been productive of absolute cures. Rue, a strong-smelling plant, gives forth an essence which has been found to act beneficially ‘in many and vari- ous ways. For liver complaints the sniffing of a few drops of the essential oil, shaken on a handkerchief, has produced relief. Spasms, severe indi- gestion and other forms of stomach trouble have been removed by soaking fastening it to the pit of the stomach by a flannel band for a few hours. Headaches, sleepiness, lowness of spirits, have often passed away through the use of the essential oil of rue, or to a scent made up o’ it, | While perfumes made from mint have often been used to drive away a fit of sleepiness, yet at night time this perfume.is a sleep producer. The experiment has been tried by some of those who failed to woo the gentle Morpheus in other ways. A §mall slate-sponge was soaked in mint. per- fume, inserted in a linen bag and placed under the part of the pillow where the shoulders rested. In a short time the victim of insomnia was in- sensible to all of earth’s conditions. Thirty-two different :kinds of per- fumes are made from roses and four- teen are on the market whose basis is derived from the lily—that is, the oil of the plant. All the citrene scents, bergamot, neroli, orange-flower water, are both refreshing and stimulating. Lavender water is peculiarly. suited to high-strung temperaments, and as a remedy for hay fever it is very eflica- cious. | In cases of faintness from heat or overcrowding it is invaluable as a remedy.—New York Press. Mosquitoes Carried by Cars, The railroads running through the mountains of western Maryland have been the means of introducing the malarial mosquito into that section of the, State, according to Professor Philip R. Uhler, president of the Mary- land Academy of Sciences and provost of the Peabody Institute. Professor Uhler said yesterday that the mosquitoes are being carried by freight cars from Spring Gardens, Baltimore, to the mountains of west- ern Maryland, and that he is sure of this from the fact that while in the mountains he has picked mosquitoes from freight cars which had been hauled there fim Baltimore. Pro- fessor Uhler said he has been going to the Blue Ridge Mountains for thirty years and never saw a mosquito there until three years ago. As each mosquito lays 500 eggs at once, the rapidity with which they multiply may be imagined, although the female dies after doing this much to propagate her species. Under fa- vorable @onditions the eggs are hatched in two weeks. Formerly the mosqui- toes could not exist in the mountainous section of the State, Professor Uhler said, but since the country has become more thickly settled and the water courses polluted the pests have an ex- cellent chance to propagate. The fe- male selects as favorable a spot as possible for depositing her eggs, and under present conditions, the professor said, the mosquitoes will thrive and will be ready in the spring to start out on their mission of torture.—Baltimore Sun, - : § Raincoat For a Bear. 2 There is one big brown bear in town that gets coddled beyond belief. He belongs to a Sixth avenue furrier. He is not a live bear. Even the memory of the oldest passenger on the elevated road goeth 16t back to the time of that bear's demise; yet, in spite of his long period as a “dead one,’ he is the sleckest, best groomed bear in New York. That is because the furrier takes such good care of him. Storms are never allowed to beat upon his glossy coat. . He cannot be humored to the extent of being brought indoors during a downpour because it is his business to stand on a pedestal outside and drum up ‘trade, but the next best thing is done for him. He is provided with a rain coat.. It covers him from snout to tail, so no matter how hard the rain may beat or the wind may blow he is insured from damage thereby.—New York Press. To Tear a Pack of Cards. 5 To tear a pack of cards in two is regarded by some as a marvelous feat of strength, and yet the trick is pos- sible to any one with fairly strong fingers. The secret of the trick lies in the fact that the entire pack .is not torn at once, but in pretending to get a grip on the pack the strong man so manipulates the cards that they overlap. In this way but a single card is torn at a time and once the surface is torn the rest is easy. A groom recently took some horses from England to Australia for a resi- dent of that Commonwealth. Pouobse a piece of linen in the perfume and | FiT8permanentlvoured. No fits or nervouss NerveRestorer, $Ztrialbottleand treatise free Dr.R.H. Kvixg, Ltd, 51 Arch £t., Phila. Pa General Trepoff is a man of most aris- tocratic appearance. Mrs, Winslow’s B6othing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums,reducesinflamma- tion,allays pain,cures wind coliz,25c. 4 bottle Of the 105 counties in Kansas forty-four ere without a pauper. Tam sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mrs. Tromas Ros- xRTS, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y, Feb. 17,1900 It takes a woman with an imagination to wear the hat of the day. $100 Reward. 100. The readers of this paper will be pleasedto Jearnthat there is at least one dreaded dis- easethat science has besa abla to cure inall itsstages, and that is Catarra. Hall’s Catarra Cureis the only positive cure now known to stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hail’s CatarrhCureistakeninter- nally actingdir3stly upon the blood and mu- coussurfazesof tae system, thereby destroy- ingthe foundation of tae diseass, andigivinz thepatient stren sta by building up the cen- stitution and assisting naturs in doing its work. Theproprietors havaso much faithin itscurative powers tnat they offer One Hun- dred Dollarsforaay cas» taal it fails to cara, 3 Bend for iist of testimonials. Address nessafter first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great | themedical fraternity. Catarrh being a con- | | AILING WOMEN. Keep the Kidneys Wel! and the Kidneys Will Keep You Well. Sick, suffering, languid women are learning the true canse of had backs and how to them. Mrs W,. G. Davis, of Gronsbeck, Texas, says: “Back- aches rYurt me so I could hardly stand. Spells and sick headache + were frequent and th: action of the the kidneys was ir- Soon after I began taking regular. Doan’s Kidney Pills I passed several gravel stones. 1 got well and the irouble has not returned. My back is good and sirong and my general health better.” .: Sold by all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N., Y, Steei Rails. The commercial power of the world is largely due to the invention of steel rails. When the roads were built of iron rails the whole system . F.J. Caexey & Co., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggisis, Te. ! Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation, Solid Train of Peas. The first solid train of canned peas ever shipped from an American can- niag factory went out from a canning company’s plant at Longmont, Col. recently. Kost All His Mair—Sératched Till Blood Ran—Grateful Mother Tells ol His Cure by Cuticura For 5c, “When our baby boy was three months old he had the milk crust very badly on his head, so that all the hair came out, and it itched so bad he would scratch until the blood ran. I got a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment. I applied the Cuticura and put a thin cap on his head, and before I had used half of the box it was entirely cured, his hair eom- menced to grow out nicely again, and he has had no return of the trouble. (Signed) Mus. H. P. Holmes, Ashland, Ore.” MILK CRUST ON BABY! had to be renewed every 18 months. Swiss Must Vote. In Switzerland every male between the agg of- 20 and 65 is obliged to vote, udiess he be a pauper, criminal or a bankrupt. These have not the right of voting. The Life Saver of Children With Croup, Coughs, Colds and Pneumonia is” Hox sie’s Croup Cure.” It prevents Diphtheria and Mem - branous Croup. No opium. No nausea. ac. Mailed vostpaid AP. MOXIE, Busmo, N. Y. 5 /PISO’S. CURE FOR; CURES WHEKE ALL E1SE FAILS. Best Congh Syrup, Tastes Good. Use 4 in time. Sold by aruggista. pal EE To RE | (5 IN ONE DAY RIPE “HAS NO EQUAL FOR HEahazs —— KEYSTONE THE WONDERFUL STORY OF THE EB MINE IN NEVADA WILLIAM J. LYNCH, MINE THE FAMOUS NEVADA PROSPECTOR, TELLS 4 STORY OF THE RICHNESS OF THIS GREAT IN THE DESERT OF NEVADA. which in its fullness . * . ” A story replete in detail of what is destined to become a wonderful mane---4 story of interest to every reader of this paper--- A story that can be perused ivith profit---A story has yet to be written. over the deserts looking for minin that is destined to become a richest mining district of the world. The Lookout Mines and the rich ledges which resent time apex from the K ard for me to write an the Keystone is properties of the State of Nevada. | The Keystone in its state to-day is de-| veloped almost sufficiently to be a shipper | of ore. I am going to tell you what "I have done with the property and what further I intend to do on it. | A shaft has been sunk 90 feet in depth | which gives assay of $38.20 a ten. A| tunnel 263 feet in. length, 5 feet in| width by 7 in height equipped with ore | cars, the equal of any in the State of | Nevada, two blacksmith shops on the | property one at the entrance of the tun- nel and one at the end of the wagon road which has heen built at a distance of over 2,000 feet. Assays have been | taken from all over the property in order | to get the best possible point to sink | from. Infact, this property has been so | extensively prospected that all that is| now needed is sufficient money to de- velop it to bring to the surface the values | which are below. There is a ledge on the- Keystone property 36 feet in width on | the surface which averages across. its en- tire width $11.20 and shows values as high as $93.80. This is’ the ledge which | we are driving for. We expect to en-| counter that ledge in the neighborhaod of 340 feet, or in other words, we have vet to drift in..the neighborhood of 735 feet before cutting the Seton When it is opened from.the tunnel it will give us! a depth of 278 feet on it. Do vou realize what ‘it will mean when we get to such a depth:.in a ledge which | shows such values on the surface? We! know that it will mean our fortunes and | the. Keystone Mine at the present time. | Most every successful enterprise has | solicited funds from the public in order | to bring its propositions to a successful | conclusion. A great many people have | an idea that when one has a gold mine ! that all one has to do is to stick a pick | in the ground and take out the gold. 1t | takes just as much expenditure of time | and money primarily to develop a zold | mine as it does any other busines We | have the mine and we need your capital to put it en a dividend paying basis. We | offer you value received for every dol- lar you put into it.: We want to tell | you a’ few mining facts and then you can see for yourself whether this is a mine that is worth investing in. . ; ou can stand on Knickerbocker Mountain, which comprises the Keystone Tine, and look across the country for three miles in one direction and count the richest minés in Goldfield, the mines | that have made it the greatest mining | camp the world has every known. These | mines are all in the same mineral belt, | the veins run in the same direction and | they all trend to Knickerbocker Moun- | tain. There is the Combination which | produces - $250.000 a month and ore enough in sight to run for five years, the Florence on which a lease has pro- duced $15,000 daily; the Sandstorm, Jan- | nary, Lookout, Dixie, Red Top. Jumbo; | and many others that have produced dur strike the ledge we believe that we will strike ore rich enough to |! put the property at that moment on a paying basis and we will have all the money needed to erect the costly ma- chinery which all big mines must have. ' Fill out a coupo cisco, Cal. MATA foie, P * Key West-sent to the North the first six-months of this year about 15,000,004 plan seems te work well, It is claimed cigars. i throughout Maine, are sawing All the milig on the lumber at {op capacity. i of stock (fully paid and non-assessable) of | shar the KEYSTONE MINE at 25 ects. per| able COUPON | &:. | | for in Sec mutants raters rans vanes) TO-DAY. | Towni............. State. 1 have spent years of my life mining in the State of Nevada. ini properties. but I never found anything that looked so good to me as the Keystone Mine, When I Jocated the Keystone Mine I knew that I had at last found i { part of the mining history of he Keystone Mine is three and one-half miles cast of Goldfield in the proven eystone ground. advertisement, but I'll do the best I can. oped the Keystone ground as extensively as my with that development my opinion is no longer one of the richest mining | 0 | This is | please. ass scribes for this stock will lose a dollar | and on.the other hand will be opportunity to make proportionately a much out of it as the mine makes for will be preciate it in a substantial way by s ing for your money which | y we € many times more than the mancy it cost you within a very fortunes pose you to drive you'out of business and no man who can set a price on your product. trademark on it, I have wandered 1 have found and sold many mines, a big mine, a mine Nevada. Keystone lies between the Dixie and the both these mines are working on at the I am only a plain miner and it is I have devel- limited capital will permit, and an opinion, but is a certainty that The owners of the Dixie Mine oficred me $100,000 for the Keystone before any de- velopment had been done on it, but | made up my mind that if it was worth any such sum to them it was worth more to me, and while 1 was sorely tempted to sell, for $100,000 is a lot of money, I refused the offer and in place of it, incorporated the property, but still hold the controlling interest and I in- tend to do my best to raise the money necessary to develop this property into a dividend payer, for when it is developed it will be ‘a dividend payer and a big one. I have stal®ed my all on the Keystone Mine. 1 have staked it because I am a practical miner, because I know a mine when I sce one. No man could buy the control of the Keystone from me to-day for less than an indenendent fortune, for am reasonably certain. that it will be more than. an independent fortune for me when it is developed. It is impos- sible to .sit down by vour sides and tell you what a‘ good proposition we have, so we can only put down the facts here for you tu read and -consider:’ Yon will probably say, “I don’t know Lynch, how know if he is telling the truth.” true; you don’t know Lynch, but he is known all over Nevada. He is fon tunate in having such men ‘for his. friends as P.-T.. Flannigan, President of’ | the Reno. Land, Light and Water Com- {bany, one of the largest stockowners in [ the "State of Nevada and one of the wealthiest men of that State; KE. E. Aid-" ridge, Paying Teller of the State Bank oy Trust Co., Goldfield, Nevada; D. M. I money’ for everybody who buys stock - in | Dysart, Superintendent of the -National Ice Co. of California, Polarias, California. Write to them and ask them if they ever heard of him doing a -dishonest or unkind act to any man or woman. Ask any bank or merchant in Reého; Nevada, or Goldfield, Nevada. They all know | him and they will tell you that he is | speaking the ‘truth when he teils you that he located a real mine when he lo- cated the Keystone property. If you subscribe for any of this stock, we proem- ise you ‘a square deal and: to let vou’ know - just how everything . ig getting | along and to post vou so that vou can keep vour stock or- sell it just as you On the 15th of each month a report of the progress of the month past, made by the Keystone Minitg Com- | pany, will be issued to every holder of! K eystone stock, large and. small. . We 1 re you that not one person who sub- | given every | us. you to know. that vour help | appreciated now. « We will We want you back stock hove and firmly believe will be worth | it hasi shart time. . More } have been made in Goldfield | luring the last vear than anywhere else | é ¢ in the world. Clean fortunes, too. Gold | ing the last year ovér $4,000,000. . ». | mining is the finest kind of a business. | When we have run the tunnel suffi- | for it is clean. There is no competition. | ciently to lesmen to employ, no trust to op- | and no combination of l capital You the gold with Uncle Sam's worth 100 cents on have tne of dizziness | 59 certs a box.’ ANTI-6 { which 1 One Dollar | for a Postal Card | This company will give one dollar for the first reliable information of an opportunity to sell a steam engine or boiler of our standard types within our range of sizes. This does nor include vertical, traction or gas en- gines. If you know of anybody in- tending to buy an engine or boiler tell us. A Postal will do. ENGINES AND BOILERS have for years been the standard tor all steam plants Bes: of material and workmanship. Our big output enables us to sell on small prol- its. An Atlas, the best in the world, costs ne more than the other kind, Write today for onr speciai offer ATLAS ENGINE WORKS Selling agencies in all cities INDIANAPOLIS Corliss Engines High Speed Engines Water Tube Roilors Pour Valve Engines Compound Engines T ibular Roilers Autoniatic Engines Throttling Engines Portable Boilerr Yor ch > B Atlas Engines in service 8,000,000 8. P. Atlas Boilers in service 4,000,000 H. P, FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculidr'to a : their sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc- , cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs | stops discharges, heals inflammation an local | soreness, cures leucorrheea and nasal catarrh, | Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure [~water, and is far more cleansing, healing, pric and ical than liquid amtiseptics for a TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Pres, | THE RB. PAXTON COMPAKRY Boston, Mass, 13 p. bb ok free, Highest refs EN Long ex, erience, Fitzgerald i KCO.Deptsl Washiogton,D.0 TO GUARANTEED CURE GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA, Iwon’teell Antl-Gripine toa dealer who won't Guarantee Tg, Call for your MONEY BACK F. W. Diemer, JM.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Ho IF IT DOESN'T CURE, dollar in every market in the world. You earn. your money by honest methods. You get that which ‘is rightfully yours. You are a producer and one who helps to add to the world’s storehouse. We can’t impress our sincerity upon you in cold type, but if you could come out to Nevada and walk over the Keystone and see this wonderful property with its bi ledges only waiting for a few paltry dol- lars to develop them into producers of gold. then we are sure you would be satisfied that this statement is written in all truth and honesty. As Recretary and Manager of the Key- stone Mining Company, I have been au- thorized by the Board of Directors of that company to dispose of 100,000 shares of treasury stock for the purposes of development at 25 cents a share. With the money derived from the sale of that stock: the mine will beyond doubt have enough money in the treasury to com- plete all: development necessary and put it on a dividend paying basis. The stock is being put out at 25 cents per share, either on a cash or an installment sub- scription. . If ‘vou wish to pav cash for it send me the money and a certificate will be immediately Forwarded to you. If you wish :to_buy it on an installment plan send one-fifth of the total amount of your subscrintion and - the balance in four- equal monthly payments, or put the first pavment in your bank and have them notify me and the stock will be sent to your bank to be held in escrow until such time as you have paid for the full subscription, when the bank will de- liver it to yaqu. J . Don’t delay in sending your subserip- tion, as there are but 100.000 shares of this- stock to dispise of. This advertise- ment wii sot spear again, as we want the money which wiii come in from the sale of this stock to develop the nine with. We want vour help ind we want - it promptly, and the prompt ones are the ones which will benefit in the Keystone Mine. The Keystone Mine is fully ‘paid and. non-assessable. are 300,000 There ies in” the treasury. He other 709,000 snares are pooled and in escrow in the State Bank and Trust Company of Gold- field Nevada, under the pool agreement that not 6ne share of it can be sold until the mine is on a naving basis. In other words the original owners of the mine cannot benefit one cent except in devel- opment of the property by the sale of the stock which is being put out for the Keystone Mining Company. The mine must be on a paying basis before the pool agreement which holds their stock can be broken. ; - [f you wish to invest in a proposition conscientiously believe will re- a short time many times what investment will be, cut out this cou- 1 | pon, fill it in. send me certified check, New York Exchange or Money Order for the amount of your subscription and mail it to-day. I, as Secretary and ‘Gen- eral Manager of the Keystone Minin Company. promise you an economical anc honest administration of -the affairs df the Keystone Company and an, account of every dollar spent by that Company. Address all communications in reference to the stock to ‘WILIZAM J. LYNCH, | Sec. and Gen’l Mgr. Keystone Mining-Co., 305 James Flood Bldg., San I'rancisco, California. n to-day. It will bring you iaformation free. WILLIAM J. LYNCH, Secretary, San Fran-| WILLIAM J. LYNCH, Enclosed herewith please find | | cise eing in full for shares) $...... per share Secretary, San Fran- Enclosed herewith please find being my first payment on ),. Cal es of stock (fully naid and non-assess- » KEYSTONE MINE at 25 cts. ) of the
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